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![]() "RST Engineering" wrote in message ... Understood. What I started out to do (and still plan on doing) is to have a device that will stay permanently mounted to the engine that can be calibrated (adjusted, signed, pick a verb) when the engine is known to be good and light a "your engine is about to come apart" lamp at the appropriate time. What this group seems to be leaning toward is a lab quality device that will allow for sophisticated diagnostics. That ain't the thrust of my Kitplanes columns. KISS and BURP. Jim As is tradition, we tend to get off topic ;-) I think you can accomplish this using the methods discussed. Mount 2 proximity probes 90 degrees apart. Calibrate the readings for normal low vibrations (be sure to account for any nonlinearities in the probe). Design the circuit to trip the buzzer/lamp when the vibration exceeds the normal level. You may need some analog circuitry to help (gain, etc). But you don't need to get much fancier than that. Adam |
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